This is an interlocutory appeal 1 from summary judgment entered in favor of Northern Indiana Public Service Company and against James Brown in his personal injury action against NIPSCO and others. 2 We reverse.
I.
Summary Judgment
Brown was a construction laborer employed by Dedelow, Inc. On the day he was injured Brown had been sent to the Dedelow constructiоn yard to help move steel pipe from one area of the yard to another. A crane was used to carry the pipe, with Brown and another worker attaching the crane cables to the pipe and guiding the pipe as it was moved to the bed of a nearby truck. Brown was injured when some part of the crane contacted an uninsulated high voltage wire running over the construction yard.
Brown's complaint alleged that NIPSCO was negligent in placing the power lines at a height which did not allow the safe operation of a cranе and in failing to warn of the dangers of operating cranes in close proximity to the power lines.
NIPSCO first moved for summary judgment on the ground that it owed no duty to Brown as a matter of law. The trial court denied NIPSCO's motion, holding that it could not find as a matter of law that no duty existed running from NIPSCO to the injurеd plaintiff. NIPSCO renewed its motion for summary judgment, arguing for the application of the "open and obvious" rule enunciated by the Supreme Court in Bemis Co., Inc. v. Rubush (1981) Ind.,
The court having reviewed the doe uments filed herein on the renewed motion for summary judgment by the defendants, Northern Indiana Public Service Company and Pettibone Corporation, now finds that there is no material dispute as to fact and that the defendant, Northern Indiana Public Service Company, is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.
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Having reviewed the evidence herein and further having reviewed the additional testimony of the plaintiff in the deposition 'and the testimony of other deponents herein, the court now finds that the situation as described by the plaintiff and other deposed witnesses brings into bearing in this cause of action, with respect to the defendant NIP-SCO, the "open and obvious rule." The court having reviewed the decisions of Bemis Company, Inc., The [sic] Rubush (1981) 427 N.E.2nd 1058 and J.I. Case Company v. Sandefur (1964)245 Ind. 213 , 197 N.E.2nd 519 now finds that the plaintiff herein was aware of the risk of the crane coming in contact with the power lines.
*796 The court further finds that the plaintiff was aware of the distance of said power lines and that he had been repeatedly warned to be aware of their existence and to avoid the same.
The court finds that the above cited decisions clearly support the рosition of the moving party, Northern Indiana Public Service Company, and as such, there being no dispute as to fact, the defendant, Northern Indiana Public Service Company, is entitled to a summary judgment as a matter of law.
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Summary judgment awarded to the defendant NIPSCO and denied as to thе defendant, Pettibone Corporation, all per order entered.
It is from this order that Brown appeals, arguing that the trial court erred in applying the open and obvious rule in a nonpro-ducts liability case and that there were genuine issues of material fact as to whether the risk of injury and the fact that the lines were uninsulated were open and obvious to Brown.
NIPSCO has conceded that since the trial court's order was entered, the Supreme Court's decision in Bridgewater v. Economy Engineering Co. (1985) Ind.,
Our standard of review for summary judgment is well known; it is the same standard applied by the trial court. "If the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits and testimony, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law" summary judgment is appropriate. Indiana Rules of Procedure, Trial Rule 56(C). The purpose of the summary judgment procedure is to terminate those causes of action which have no factual dispute and which may be determined as a matter of law. However, the procedure must be applied with extreme caution so that a party's right to the fair determination of a genuine issue is not jeopardized. Jones v. City of Logansport (1982) Ind.App.,
Actionable negligence in Indiana requires proof of the following elements: (1) a duty imposed on the defendant for the benefit of the plaintiff; (2) a breaсh of that duty by the defendant; (3) an injury to the plaintiff proximately caused by the defendant's breach. Lambert v. Parrish (1984) Ind.App.,
II.
Duty
The existence of a duty running from the defendant to the plaintiff is a question of law to be determined by the court. Bearman v. University of Notre Dame (1983) Ind.App.,
*797 While it is clear that the trial court must determine if an existing relationship gives rise to a duty, it must also be noted that a factual question may be interwoven with the determination of the existence of a relationship, thus making the ultimate existence of a duty a mixed question of law and fact.
Id. at 1141. Thus, if a certain set of facts is found, then a duty exists.
In this case, the question is whether there existed such a relationship between NIPSCO and Brown as to give rise to a duty of care on NIPSCO's part. In addressing that question we must look first to the lаw governing electric utilities. It is well settled that in Indiana, companies engaged in the generation and distribution of electricity have a duty to exercise reasonable care to keep distribution and transmission lines safely insulated in places: where the general publiс may come into contact with them. Petroski v. Northern Indiana Public Service Co. (1976)
This means, then, that an electric utility will not generally be required to insulate its wires with a covering or coating to protect only those persons who might come into contact with power lines in the course of their employment as electric utility employees, Denneau v. Indiana & Michigan Electric Co., supra, [ (1971)150 Ind.App. 615 ,277 N.E.2d 8 ], or while cleaning and repairing a sign near power lines, Jakob v. Gary Railways, Inc., supra, [ (1947)118 Ind.App. 13 ,70 N.E.2d 753 ], or while installing a TV antenna on private property. - Northern Indiana Public Service Co. v. Howard (1957),127 Ind.App. 488 ,139 N.E.2d 558 . An exception is made tо this rule, however, when the utility knows or has knowledge of such facts from which it should know that a particular segment of the population will be regularly exposed to uninsulated wires for one reason or another, particularly when children are involved. Petroski v. Northern Indiana Publiс Service Co., supra (boy climbing tree); Wise v. Southern Indiana Gas & Electric Co. (1941),109 Ind.App. 681 ,34 N.E.2d 975 (boy climbing bridge with sagging power line nearby); Fort Wayne and Northern Indiana Traction Company v. Stark (1920),74 Ind.App. 669 , 127 N.E.460 (boy climbing tree).
There is no question that in this instance Brown was not a member of the general public-that "great multitude of persons who would, in thе course of daily events, be exposed to danger by the presence of an uninsulated wire carrying a dangerous voltage of electricity." Jakob v. Gary Railways, Inc. (1947)
In denying NIPSCO's first motion for summary judgment, the trial court held *798 that it could not find as a matter of law that NIPSCO had no knowledge of such facts indicating that employees of Dedelow would be exposed to the uninsulated wire, therefоre the court declined to find that as a matter of law no duty existed. We agree that this issue was inappropriate for dispo- . sition by summary judgment.
There was evidence that Dedelow began using the site as a construction yard in 1975. Heavy construction equipment, including cranes, hаd been regularly used on the premises since that time. NIPSCO employees had been to the site at least five different times to service and install electrical lines and equipment prior to Brown's accident. Although the lines which traversed the yard were thirty-four feet above thе ground-exceeding by fourteen feet the National Electrical Safety Code provision which NIPSCO claims is applicable-the evidence also shows that the crane used the day of the accident had a boom as much as seventy feet high. We conclude that thеre are material issues of fact regarding whether NIPSCO knew or should have known that the height and location of its uninsulated power lines across the Dedelow construction yard posed a danger to which Dedelow employees, like Brown, would be regularly exposed, аnd if so whether NIP-SCO took such care as a person of reasonable prudence would ordinarily use under the conditions and circumstances. These are not questions which are amenable to summary disposition as a matter of law.
IH.
Contributory Negligence
Assuming for the sake of argument that it had а duty, NIPSCO contends that it cannot be liable because Brown was con-tributorily negligent.
Contributory negligence, as a defense to a negligence claim, is generally a question of fact for the jury. The theory should not be found as a matter of law unless the facts are undisputed and only a single inference can be drawn therefrom. Moore v. Federal Pacific Electric Co. (1980) Ind.App.,
Contributory negligence is the failure of a person to exercise for his own safety that degree of care and caution which an ordinary, reasonable and рrudent person in a similar situation would exercise. Public Service Co. of Indiana, Inc. v. Gibbs (1984) Ind.App.,
An examination of Brown's deposition reveals that the day he was injured was the first time he had ever worked at Dedelow's construction yard. (Record p. 112). He had occasionally worked with cranes, but he had never signalled cranes nor seen anyone else do so. (Record p. 109). He said he saw the wires overhead, (Record p. 185), but he never saw the boom near the wires. (Record p. 167). He could not see the boom being raised; he was watching the pipe and guiding it to the truck. (Record p. 124, 171, 178). He figured the crane operator knew what he was doing. (Record p. 178). He had to hold the pipe and could not watch the wires. (Record p. 214). We are unable to say as a matter of law that Brown exposed himself to dangers so obvious, imminent, and glaring that no reasonable man еxercising due care for his safety would have hazarded them. See Stallings v. Dick (1965)
*799 We hold that the question of Brown's awareness of the lines and appreciation of the hazard to himself is particularly fact sensitive and whether he acted as a prudent, reasonable man would have acted under the сircumstances is a question best left to a jury.
We reverse the trial court's grant of summary judgment in favor of NIPSCO and remand for trial.
Notes
. NIPSCO filed a motion to dismiss the appeal addressed to the timeliness of Brown's motion to correct error. The motion to dismiss was denied by this court on April 14, 1986 and we decline NIPSCO's invitation in its Appellee's brief to further consider this issue.
. The issues pertaining to the single remaining defendant are not pertinent in this appeal.
